Growing A
Synagogue Part E – Staff and the Modern Shul
There are
kehillot (communities) that have a wealth of talented members who
don't need the guidance of a rabbi or cantor in their congregations.
If rabbis are involved, they are teachers in the adult studies
program or advisers to the leadership team.
Full disclosure:
I am a pulpit rabbi and have worked in and with a variety of
congregations that have used my talents in different ways.
There are some
today who think that rabbis should no longer be the spiritual leaders
of congregations. I disagree with that but I do agree that the basic
role of the rabbi in a congregation has changed and continues to
change. There are some rabbis who have been able to work in this
different environment and some who feel that they need to hang on to
the older style of synagogue. Some of my colleagues have told me
directly, that they are uncomfortable with new ways of leading a
congregation and want to keep things the same for as long as they
can. While I understand the need to sometimes be the one who holds
the line to changes in halacha,
as we have discovered, the issue is not halacha
at all; it is the very nature of the organization that is changing. I
have tried to show many times that there is still a great respect
among Jews for rabbis and for Jewish tradition. Young Jews who create
meaningful communities do not reject Judaism; they embrace it in some
very traditional ways. I think that issues like egalitarianism and
pluralism are crucial concepts in the creation of new communities,
and once these communities come together, they retain traditional
observances, like keeping kosher and observing Shabbat.
If I were to talk
to my colleagues, I would tell them that the halachic
issues that are being presented as things that need to be changed are
not the crux of the problem, only the symptoms. When people are
unhappy with programming and prayer in our congregations they may say
things like “Services are boring” or “Why do we have to pay so
much for X?” or “Why can't you talk about current events?” The
fact is, many of our current members really don't know at all what
they want, only that they are unhappy with what they have. If we
press them to tell us exactly what they are looking for, they usually
don't have an answer or tell us that they want us to do what we are
already doing but somehow to do it differently.
I believe that a
rabbi must be constantly looking at what successful models of
congregations look like and creating new ways to bring the successful
models to their synagogues. Naturally there will be those who don't
want anything to change and those who want everything to change.
Reality is still somewhere between those two poles. Leadership is not
easy. My sister is a hazzan
and long ago she told me that a hazzan
that is not introducing new melodies
and new liturgical configurations and changing up the service is just
being lazy. The same applies to rabbis (I know, I know, who am I
calling lazy?!) I don't mean this with disrespect for my colleagues,
both those who are my senior and those who are junior colleagues. We
have a lot of things that we must do as rabbis. But growing our
congregations is one of the most crucial. If you look at
congregations that are looking for new rabbis, it does not take long
to see that all of them want help with “change”. They want to
change and they don't want to change (“change what I don't like and
don't change what I do like”) but that, we know is impossible. An
executive director once reminded me that “nobody likes all the
focus on the Bar Mitzvah boy at Saturday services, except the members
of the family. Yet the family makes up over 75% of the congregation
that morning, and they want the focus to be on the boy.” So how do
you make the regulars happy without angering 75% of the people in
shul that morning? When we give blessings at the Torah for those with
a birthday or anniversary, everyone tells me that it takes too long,
except those who are getting the blessings. (It is always too long
unless it involves me.)
Congregations
have a history. Congregations like to write their history and invite
others to read it. Often synagogue websites have links to the history
of their communities. These histories often point back to the
wonderful days when the congregations were small, or when they were
in their heyday. Sometimes, however, there are darker secrets in the
history of a congregation that the members don't like to recall or
don't want to recall; problems with clergy, financial problems,
members and staff who are arrested and the synagogue is implicated,
sexual harassment of a employee, sexual abuse of a child in the
school, embezzlement, misappropriation of funds, the sudden death of
beloved rabbi or president. All of these can devastate a congregation
and produce years of upheaval. When a congregation faces these kinds
of serious issues the officers and members of the congregation want
to quickly get past their problems and return to the way things used
to be. But going backwards is impossible. Things will never be the
way they used to be because we only see the past through the rose
tinted glasses that will not let us acknowledge the problems and
difficulties that we also endured. In synagogue life, the past is
interesting, but we can't live there. We need to constantly have
vision and focus on what lies ahead.
One colleague
reminded me that this is the reason that cars have a large windshield
and a small rear view mirror, so we can see more of where we are
going and less of where we have been. What would success look like
in the twenty-first century? It will not be the same as it was in the
twentieth century. Life does move on and we must not let our history
cloud our vision of the future. The questions we need to ask are what
are we doing now that we want to continue and what needs to be
changed/updated/renewed or created? This is not a challenge just to
synagogues. All modern organizations and businesses have to look to
the future or face difficult consequences that come from living in
the past. As rabbis we need to encourage these questions and we must
be prepared to answer them.
Jack and Suzi
Welch in the article I mentioned earlier, write, When
a team is infused with trust, people play to their better angels.
They share ideas freely. They help their colleagues when they are
stuck and need an insight. What they do every day then becomes about
the group's success, not their own. They're not worried about not
getting the credit for some big win; they know a teammate will say
something like “Hey, don't thank me. Cary was the one with the
eureka moment that set the whole thing in motion.” and Cary will
say, “Thanks. I may have had the idea, but you executed.” The
candor-trust connection has another benefit: it promotes an
environment of risk-taking. Who wants to try something new if they
sense they'll get a stick in the eye (or worse) should they fall?
Leaders of winning teams encourage their people to take on huge
challenges and let them know that they're safe no matter what
happens. And then they make good on their word.
I have seen
boards that are so risk adverse that they quash every new idea that
should arise. I have seen rabbis and directors tell excited lay
leadership that what they propose can't be done. Anyone who has ever
served on a synagogue board or who has served on the professional
staff has heard the phrases that kill new ideas, “We tried that
once and it didn't work.” “Who will you get to chair that
project?” “That may work in big cities but in our town it would
never fly.” “That is not what our congregation is about, if you
want to do that, you should join a different synagogue that does
stuff like that.” We have thousands of ways that leadership, both
lay and professional, can kill new ideas. What we need is a culture
that encourages new ideas, new programs and forward thinking. It is
not about who gets the credit, but what is for the good of the
congregation. If we try something and it fails, then we have learned
something and, if we think the idea is still good, we can try again
with an eye to overcoming the obstacles. If it just doesn't work,
well, then we will try something different. The payoff of an idea
that does work is worth the previous failures that have helped set
the foundation for the success. We can find new ideas in the talent
that we already have, and in searching for ideas that have worked
elsewhere. All we need to do to make these ideas our own is to be
open to possibilities.
I therefore
believe that the best approach is for both rabbi/staff and lay
leadership to create a working dialogue. Often the rabbi only hears
good things and the president hears all the complaints. That needs to
change. Both rabbi and president need to share their points of view
with one another. Together they need to identify the real needs of
the congregation (not just the personal needs of those who complain
all the time) and then look into how other congregations deal with
these issues; what may be working and what clearly is not working
(and what would never work here!). Complaints about things being too
long (services, religious school) are symptoms of programs that do
not engage the participants. “Boring” (services, programming) is
the symptom of the lack of change. Dropping membership is the symptom
of people who are voting with their feet to find something meaningful
somewhere else. It means we have missed their needs. If young Jews
are not joining, it is because they don't see anything for them in
our congregation. And that is why you are reading this book.
Cantors have an
even harder time. New hazzanim
are trained to be not just singers, but auxiliary staff members. They
are often trained to be teachers, education directors and even
executive directors. Older hazzanim
were trained to lead services with classical cantorial melodies. The
problem is that many of those melodies are anywhere from 50-150 years
old and are not appealing to most contemporary audiences. In the
documentary, “100 Voices: A Journey Home” the hazzanim
in the film understand that these old classic melodies, many of which
came from Europe, are not meaningful to younger Jewish audiences. I
recently wrote in my congregation’s bulletin, “I
still love the song that Michelle and I danced to at our wedding.
Sometimes, if we are out dancing, and I feel really romantic, I ask
the band to play it for us to dance to. I would never expect my radio
station to play it anymore. Music has moved on and while there are
still some of us who like “oldies” it is not the way for a radio
station to stay on the air. Even my favorite station that played
music from the 1950's, now plays “oldies” from the 60's and 70's.
My music is now older than the “oldies”!”
Musical styles change. That is a fact of life. A cantorial concert
can be the showcase for classical hazzanut,
but the liturgy deserves more modern influences. Hazzanim
who can't keep up may find themselves left behind.
It is crucial
that the rabbi and hazzan
work together to create a meaningful service. There should be no
reason for rabbis and hazzanim
to be feuding or working at cross purposes. While each needs to
respect the role of the other, and must treat each other as
colleagues, there will not always be agreement on everything. What is
important is to try new things, and then come back and assess how it
is going. What is important is to talk each week as to what will make
that service unique. Sometimes it may be a reaction to something in
the news. Rabbi Sharon Braus said after the 2004 tsunami that
devastated the countries of the eastern Indian Ocean, “If your
service before the tsunami is the same as the service after the
tsunami, then something is very wrong.” We have to be sensitive to
what is happening in our world and how it affects those who are
worshiping with us in our sanctuary. Our service has to reflect
whatever is important and on the minds of the congregation.
Sometimes a service may be built around a moral issue in the
community; sometimes it will be built around getting more
participation from the congregation. When the rabbi and hazzan
work together, it creates a better atmosphere for really good things
to happen.
If we are to
change the focus of learning in the synagogue from school for
children to educating adults, this will mean a change in education
staffing as well. Rather than an “education director” what will
be needed is a “director of life-long learning”. Certainly we
will need to oversee the Jewish education of children, but the main
focus has to be on adults. There will need to be a movement away from
lectures and more to “hevruta” learning. There will need to be
more texts and more discussion. There will have to be higher level
learning and ways for those who are just beginning to “catch up”
without dragging the whole program down. Education programs must also
reflect that some learning will be in people's homes and perhaps in
the work environment as well. Coordinating study groups can be a full
time job alone once the program takes off. There can be ongoing study
programs that feature evening learning for those who work during the
day. There can be special week long programs of learning based on the
“Limmud” program that takes place each winter in England. There
can be weekend programs and Shabbaton programs that can offer a wide
range of topics to give everyone a chance to try something new.
These shorter programs should kick off a longer program if enough
people show an interest in the topic.
Teachers can be
the rabbi and cantor and any other staff member with an educational
background. Often the same teachers who do so well with our children
may be able to teach adults. Many congregations are blessed with lay
members who have solid education backgrounds or strong Judaic
backgrounds who can also lead these study sessions. Many communities
have colleges and universities with a Judaic Studies department that
can be the source of teachers and the students in the program may
also be able to lend a hand. All of this, of course, takes investment
of money as well as time. Just as the religious school for children
has school fees, so too adult education, if it is to be credible and
challenging, will also require fees from the participants. It may be
possible to find outside money from foundations and funders, and a
fund raiser in the community on behalf of adult studies could involve
a patrons' program, where people with an interest in adult studies
can help fund the program. There are opportunities for endowments and
legacy gifts as well. There may even be corporations who would
sponsor events in exchange for publicity that could help raise money
for the adult studies program. The key to the program is to create
it with high caliber talent so that adults will want to join in the
study program. Clearly we need educators who are up to the task of
creating serious adult learning.
Finally, we need
to insure that the entire synagogue staff are involved in the overall
program and are adding in their own way to the goal of engagement of
the membership. We are no longer in an age where people
say, “you should hear my Rabbi/Cantor,” etc. In the future, we
will want to hear: “This is what I
learned/taught in shul this week. It is important that our
professionals be able to put their own egos aside and let the
learners learn and the members sing.
It is not about the staff; the purpose of the synagogue is to teach
Judaism, spirituality and how to find God and meaning in life.